key: cord-339935-tguhrqvz authors: Zavattaro, Staci M.; Hall, Jeremy L.; Battaglio, R. Paul; Hail, Michael W. title: Introduction: COVID‐19 Viewpoint Symposium, Part II date: 2020-08-12 journal: Public Adm Rev DOI: 10.1111/puar.13290 sha: doc_id: 339935 cord_uid: tguhrqvz nan communication, political astuteness, and collaborative capacity. He offers practical suggestions, such as maintain network control and building social media skills, which are best practices in administrative structures and even more valuable in a crisis. Taking a European view, Bouckaert et al (2020) introduce the term -coronationalism‖ to explain the differences in response between Belgium, France, Germany, and Italy. A nationalistic approach pushed European Union ideals to the side as countries struggled with virus containment. They highlight the importance of institutional and cultural variance, points we argue are crucial for future studies about the virus response. Christensen and Laegrid (2020) focus also on Europe, using Norway as an in-depth case study. Similarly to Bouckaert et al (2020) , these authors point out cultural and political wills that made strong response possible. They draw attention specifically to the relationship between democratic legitimacy and government capacity, noting perception is key when it comes to crisis response. This point meshes with van der Wal's (2020) recommendations for engaging stakeholders to build trust prior to cataclysmic events. Charbonneau and Doberstein (2020) consider work surveillance practices and their relationship to performance management With so many public servants being forced to shift to remote working from home in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, such oversight is increasing in importance. Their article presents the results of three surveys conducted during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada that compare public servant and citizen attitudes to various cutting-edge digital surveillance tools that can be used to monitor employee work patterns. The resulting data can help governments navigate difficult questions of reasonable privacy intrusions in an increasing digitally-connected workforce. Schuster et al (2020) introduce a survey instrument to study COVID-19 via the World Bank's Bureaucracy Lab. The survey is already deployed in several countries, and the authors are open to collaboration with others as they argue survey data are important to gather during the ongoing situation that is testing administrative capacity. In their study, Dai et al (2020) take the China case and examine the crucial need for reliable, timely, and persuasive public information to gain compliance with prevention measures. Using survey data of citizens throughout China, the authors find detailed pandemic information, positive risk communication, rumor refutation, and adequate supplies combined to help people engage in protective behaviors. Future research could study this model in other contexts taking culture into account as Bouckaert et al (2020) suggest. One of the most widely used and scientifically backed measures to slow virus spread remains social distancing, and in their essay, Pedersen and Favero (2020) survey Americans to find what factors might influence compliance with social distancing. Their results highlight again the critical role of crisis communication and reliable public information, coupled with prosocial motivation. The study provides insights into behavioral adaptations similar to Dai et al (2020) , and both studies provide rich avenues for future research especially when it comes to the nudging behaviors crucial for crisis communication. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. Taking a bit of a turn, Fay and Ghadimi (2020) examine labor relations and what changed during and because of COVID-19. Labor relations is a critical management strategy, and they outline evidence-based strategies for engaging in meaningful labor negotiations during crisis, focusing on emphasizing needs of the most vulnerable first, negotiating early and regularly with leaders, and securing protections for all members. Their essay brings to light additional streams of research regarding labor negotiations during times of social and economic crisis. Without question, the pandemic has exacerbated social inequalities and brought about what some are calling the dual pandemic of COVID-19 and systemic racism (McCandless & Zavattaro, 2020) . Wright and Merritt (2020) explicitly link systemic racism and the COVID-19 response. Health inequities, segregation, food insecurity, underrepresentation in the medical profession, and exclusion from full participation in democratic ideas and ideals contribute to the inequitable response to COVID-19. In the end, the authors outline a path forward for practice and research, the latter of which outlines an agenda for better incorporating social equity meaningfully into administrative studies. Similarly to Wright and Merritt (2020) , Gaynor and Wilson (2020) use the Social Vulnerability Index to examine the effects of racism on COVID-19 deaths. They argue Black people are historically segregated into vulnerable communities, and the pandemic is visibly highlighting these systemic inequities. As a path forward, they offer targeted universalism to develop inclusive policiesoffering a lot of potential for future research. Deslatte, Hatch and Stokan (2020) explain the critical role local governments can play in addressing some of the inequalities. For instance, the Community Development Block Grant and Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant programs can be ways to equitably rebuild marginalized communities. Also highlight the health inequities, Martin-Howard and Farmbry (2020) use the social determinants of health theory to discuss strategies for mitigating these inherent inequities. Using the Bronx, New York as a case study, the authors examine the ways in which unequal access to adequate medical care increased community vulnerability and death among marginalized communities. Like Gaynor and Wilson (2020) , they offer questions for future research aimed at mitigating these ingrained problems. Using refugee migration as the object of performance, Schomaker & Bauer (2020) seek to understand patterns of administrative performance by examining networks and knowledge management within and between crises. Drawing from two German public administration surveys their results demonstrate that those administrations that were structurally prepared, those which learned during preceding crises, and those that displayed high quality network cooperation with other administrations and with society more broadly performed significantly better in the respective crises. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. Rounding out the Viewpoint symposium are contributions centering on coproduction and partnership. Complex and wicked problems such as COVID-19 require collaboration and coordination, and these essays offer insights and paths for future research. Steen and Brandsen (2020) note how the pandemic necessitated this kind of coordinated response, and they pose an important question that should guide research for years to come: will it last? They argue commitment to the partnerships, supportive regulatory frameworks, sustained funding, legal flexibility, and incentives should keep the collaborations moving forward, but that remains to be seen as the crisis still unfolds globally. The essay provides a clear path for examining their propositions in future research. Using lessons learned from the Haiti earthquake, Entress, Tyler and Sadiq (2020) provide practical steps for building community resilience related to mass fatality management (MFM). The COVID-19 pandemic showed the crippling holes in existing MFM plans, and the authors, using lessons learned from the earthquake, recommend increased collaboration, psychological support, and network leads when it comes to developing viable MFM plans going forward. Similar to Deslatte et al (2020) , Wilson et al (2020) look at the local government collective action and engaging in economically focused partnerships to mitigate damaging effects from the pandemic. They offer economic development approaches requiring coordination, and like the other essays in this Viewpoint symposium offer a path for future research to see if these strategies work, such as active versus passive partnerships. Cheng et al (2020) explain the role that community-based organizations in Zhejiang Province in China played in responding to the pandemic. Looking at what worked in that province, the authors offer four points for future research and practice when it comes to community-based organizations: strategically leverage strengths of community-based organizations; incentive volunteers to participate in prevention and control; provide technology that can facilitate effective response; build trust and long-term capacity for response. Cultural contexts also can underlie these findings as well, so future research can examine that aspect of community-based organizations. Shi et al (2020) detail the role of nonprofit organizations in providing critical response, focusing specifically on the homeless population. Using interviews from four Dallas, Texas-area nonprofit leaders, they find each organization experienced disruptions to mission and service delivery. They also faced serious ambiguity that limited how staff could respond, forcing innovation and creativity. The authors introduce the Disruptions, Ambiguity, Innovation, and Challenges framework based on these interviews, giving practitioners immediate ideas and scholars a path forward for additional research. In their article, van den Oord et al (2020) use the case of the Antwerp Port Authority to showcase network governance's strengths and limitations. When the pandemic hit, Port Authority leadership needed to change network structures to succeed. The dynamism of the network allowed for brokering to take place, bringing in experts who could round out the response. Network flexibility and dynamism seems to be an emerging theme ripe for future research. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. Finally, Hu et al (2020) look at paired assistance programs in China to show differences in hierarchical versus network approaches to emergency management response and coordination. The intricacies involved in their study highlight again the need for network flexibility to foster positive response to crises. As you review these contributions, the next chapter in this pandemic will have already been written. Lives will have been lost. Elected officials will have been deeply criticized for their efforts. Public managers will have worked seemingly endless hours, with many wearing thin and others growing disenchanted as the end seems further and further from sight. Strategies will have been proven; others will have been disproven. The price of liberty and the value of security will have been weighed out more accurately in different ends of the Earth. Decisions will have been made with dire consequences to health or to the economy. The tradeoffs inherent in the rapid-fire nature of executive-driven policy decisions are real, and they are perceived more clearly by individuals than at any time in recent history. Elected officials' choice of frames to describe and respond to the problems generate strategies and actions that will be more strongly influenced by their framing than by prevailing evidence. As the research articles appearing earlier in this issue demonstrate, elections have consequences, and the impact of this pandemic on the outcome of the 2020 U.S. general election may be its most significant enduring effect. Each party seems to have a dominant frame that will guide the policy responses to be advanced as they prepare to take office in 2021. Our sincere hope is that the evidence presented here will be used to influence many of those decisions. We hope that it will stimulate research that will reshape the way we understand many of the core concepts of our discipline. As the response continues, we will continue to seek out work that makes ever increasing conceptual advancements. While we saw many patterns across the articles in our two COVID-19 symposium issues, we also noticed some elements missing or needing stronger attention. For instance, while our contributors were intentionally global, voices from the Global South need amplification regarding pandemic response. Also, while some of the authors noted the cultural differences between countries and pandemic response, more could be done regarding administrative functions within those varied systems. Some of the pieces necessarily took a broad view, and future research can drill further down into the relationship between culture and administrative response. Finally, a collection of articles in this issue focus on social justiceand rightly sobut broadening that lens to be more intersectional and inclusive would help spur additional research. Administrative burdens need to be better understood across subsets of the population as equality in the pandemic response is pursued. European Coronationalism? A Hot Spot Governing a Pandemic Crisis An Empirical Assessment of the Intrusiveness and Reasonableness of Emerging Work Surveillance Technologies in the Public Sector Coproducing Responses to COVID -19 with Community-Based Organizations: Lessons from Zhejiang Province, China Balancing Governance Capacity and Legitimacy: How the Norwegian Government Handled the COVID -19 Crisis as a High Performer The Effects of Governmental and Individual Predictors on COVID -19 Protective Behaviors in China: A Path Analysis Model How Can Local Governments Address Pandemic Inequities? Managing Mass Fatalities during COVID -19: Lessons for Promoting Community Resilience during Global Pandemics Collective Bargaining during Times of Crisis: Recommendations from the COVID -19 Pandemic Social Vulnerability and Equity: The Disproportionate Impact of COVID -19 Global Reflection, Conceptual Exploration, and Evidentiary Assimilation: COVID -19 Viewpoint Symposium Introduction Hybrid Coordination for Coping with the Medical Surge from the COVID -19 Pandemic: Paired-Assistance Programs in China Framing a Needed Discourse on Health Disparities and Social Inequities: Drawing Lessons from a Pandemic Editors' introduction: since we last spoke Network of networks: preliminary lessons from the Antwerp Port Authority on crisis management and network governance to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic Social Distancing during the COVID -19 Pandemic: Who Are the Present and Future Noncompliers? What drives successful administrative performance during crises? Lessons from Refugee Migration and the Covid-19 Pandemic Responding to COVID -19 Through Surveys of Public Servants Nonprofit Service Continuity and Responses in the Pandemic: Disruptions, Ambiguity, Innovation and Challenges Co-production during and after the Covid-19 pandemic: will it last? Being a Public Manager in Times of Crisis The Art of Managing Stakeholders, Political Masters, and Collaborative Networks Institutional Collective Action During COVID-19: Lessons in Local Economic Development Social Equity and COVID -19: The Case of African Americans This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.